SIK2 restricts autophagic flux to support triple-negative breast cancer survival

KE Maxfield, J Macion, H Vankayalapati… - … and cellular biology, 2016 - Taylor & Francis
KE Maxfield, J Macion, H Vankayalapati, AW Whitehurst
Molecular and cellular biology, 2016Taylor & Francis
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is a highly heterogeneous disease with multiple,
distinct molecular subtypes that exhibit unique transcriptional programs and clinical
progression trajectories. Despite knowledge of the molecular heterogeneity of the disease,
most patients are limited to generic, indiscriminate treatment options: cytotoxic
chemotherapy, surgery, and radiation. To identify new intervention targets in TNBC, we used
large-scale, loss-of-function screening to identify molecular vulnerabilities among different …
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is a highly heterogeneous disease with multiple, distinct molecular subtypes that exhibit unique transcriptional programs and clinical progression trajectories. Despite knowledge of the molecular heterogeneity of the disease, most patients are limited to generic, indiscriminate treatment options: cytotoxic chemotherapy, surgery, and radiation. To identify new intervention targets in TNBC, we used large-scale, loss-of-function screening to identify molecular vulnerabilities among different oncogenomic backgrounds. This strategy returned salt inducible kinase 2 (SIK2) as essential for TNBC survival. Genetic or pharmacological inhibition of SIK2 leads to increased autophagic flux in both normal-immortalized and tumor-derived cell lines. However, this activity causes cell death selectively in breast cancer cells and is biased toward the claudin-low subtype. Depletion of ATG5, which is essential for autophagic vesicle formation, rescued the loss of viability following SIK2 inhibition. Importantly, we find that SIK2 is essential for TNBC tumor growth in vivo. Taken together, these findings indicate that claudin-low tumor cells rely on SIK2 to restrain maladaptive autophagic activation. Inhibition of SIK2 therefore presents itself as an intervention opportunity to reactivate this tumor suppressor mechanism.
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